Scientific Reports (Mar 2024)
Ultrasound generation in water via quasi-periodically snapping polymeric core–shell micro-bead excited with radiowaves
Abstract
Abstract This work reports the results of a theoretical and numerical study showing the occurrence of stochastically resonating bistable dynamic in polymeric micro-bead of sub-micrometric size with stiff core and soft shell. The system, submerged in water, is excited with a pulsed laser working in the Mega-Hertz frequency range and tuned to match both an optical and acoustic resonance of the system. The laser interacts with the carbon nanotubes embedded in the shell of the polymeric micro-bead generating heat. The concurrent action of the generated heat with the standing acoustic oscillations, gives rise to a stochastically resonating bistable system. The system in fact is forced to switch between two states (identifiable with the creation and organized disruption of a quasi-hexagonal tessellation) via a snap-through-buckling mechanism. This phenomenon results in the unprecedented generation of pressure oscillations. These results open the way to develop a new type of core–shell micro-transducers for radioacoustic imaging applications able to work in the Mega-Hertz frequency range. From a more general thermodynamic perspective, the reported mechanism shows a remarkable periodicity and energy conversion efficiency.